Also, at 8-9 months you're still new. After 9 months of magic, I was still studying RRTCM and doing the first three or four tricks I'd ever learned. If you're not naturally inclined to kinesthetic skills you're going to quite a while to get smooth at these things. Fine motor skills are the hardest to learn well. To put it into perspective, according to Malcolm Gladwell's "Outliers", it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become a master of something. Meaning to know it to the point where you're doing it subconsciously and not having to think about it. You've only done 8 months or so. That's a drop in the bucket thus far.
When I practice I tend to do some time with just sleights. I deal seconds for a few minutes, passes for a few minutes, controls, etc. Just random stuff that occurs to me, really. This gets my hands warmed up and ready to go. Then I start going through full tricks. I do each one for a few minutes, not worrying about patter or anything, just going through all the motions from start to finish. After that, I rehearse the tricks I intend to use soon, performing them as if there were people there actually having a show. After that, I tend to go back to drilling a few specific moves or tricks until my hands hurt.
We can't recommend any routines, because we don't know what you know.